AhlulBayt News Agency (ABNA): Eleven worshippers were wounded after gunmen stormed a mosque in southern Nigeria's Delta state on Friday.
No group has claimed responsibility for the violence, but Nigeria is facing a myriad of security challenges, including an extremist insurgency in the northeast, kidnappings in central and northwestern states and separatist tensions in the south.
The early morning assault occurred at the mosque in Ughelli, near the oil city of Warri.
"Eleven (people) were injured," police spokesman Bright Edafe told AFP confirming the incident.
He said an investigation was underway to find the suspects.
Local media quoting a community leader and a victim reported that an imam was kidnapped during the attack.
Police rejected the claim, saying "it was the intention to take him (the imam) but they (the gunmen) did not succeed."
Kidnappings are common in Nigeria and are largely committed for financial gain by criminals known as bandits who have no known ideological motivation.
Security in Delta state had improved compared to the early 2000s when militant groups frequently attacked oil facilities or kidnapped oil workers.
But in neighboring southeastern states, scores of recent assaults have been blamed on the outlawed separatists, the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) group and its armed wing, the Eastern Security Network.
IPOB, which seeks a separate state for ethnic Igbo people has repeatedly denied responsibility for the violence.
President Muhammadu Buhari, who came to power in 2015 and was re-elected in 2019, is under pressure to take action on Nigeria's security problems before he steps down after elections due next February.
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